Thank you Walter;
It's non-intuitive, and contrary to typical array=>void * conversion
mechanics. But it does work, and that's good enough for me right now <g>
- Kris
"Walter" <newshound digitalmars.com> wrote in message
news:ccc0pk$2ku9$1 digitaldaemon.com...

Put an & in front of myCharArray.
"Kris" <someidiot earthlink.dot.dot.dot.net> wrote in message
news:ccaj0b$7eh$1 digitaldaemon.com...

I thought this the appropriate incantation, but it produces an Access
Violation:
uint hash = typeid(char[]).getHash (myCharArray);
- Kris

I thought this the appropriate incantation, but it produces an Access
Violation:
uint hash = typeid(char[]).getHash (myCharArray);

And I would've thought this the appropriate incantation:
uint hash = myCharArray.toHash;
Objects have the toHash property, why not arrays and atomic types?
Stewart.
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